How’s It For Me
– Bitter or Sweet?
“Don’t
call me Naomi,” she told them. “Call me Mara, because the Almighty has made my
life very bitter. Ruth 1:20 (NIV)
Have you ever thought about the oyster? It
takes a grain of sand and turns it into a beautiful pearl. Too often we are
just the opposite—we take pearls and turn them into grains of sand. Bitterness
is one such sand. When we have been hurt
or offended by someone, those feelings can quickly take root in our hearts and become
resentment and bitterness, if we are not careful.
Naomi and her family, which included her
husband and two sons at the time, left Bethlehem because a famine came upon the
land. They decided to live in the region of Moab, just on the other side of the
Jordan River. During that time, Naomi’s sons married two local girls, one named
Orpah, and the other, Ruth. Life in Moab soon took a nasty turn for Naomi when
her husband and two sons died. Being freed from her family ties, Orpah left
Naomi and returned to her family, while Ruth
decided to stay with her mother-in-law. The two women returned to Bethlehem ten
years after Naomi and her family had initially left.
But Naomi’s experiences in Moab had
changed her. She no longer was the same sweet woman she had been when she left.
She no longer wanted to be known as Naomi, which means “pleasant” or “sweet.”
Rather, she wanted to be called Mara, which means “bitter.”
We cannot control what happens to us in
life, but we can control how we respond to what happens to us. In a similar
series of tragedies, Job was able to say in the midst of his suffering and
loss, “The Lord gave and the Lord has taken away; may the name of the Lord be
praised.” (Job 1:21). Joseph also was able to see that even though he had been
a slave and a prisoner, God meant his suffering all for good (Genesis 50:20).
Naomi, though she did not abandon God,
allowed bitterness to creep into her heart. She became angry with God for her experiences.
Naomi did not forget God, but she did forget that God still has a good plan and
a purpose for His children, even in the hardships, difficulties, and losses
that we encounter in this life.
Was her pain real? Yes. Was she wrong to feel that
hurt and pain? Not at all! But her bitterness was blinding her to the goodness
of God that was still at work around her. Her bitterness made her say that she
had returned empty when, in fact, she was not
empty-handed; Ruth had come with her. Naomi’s bitterness could only allow her
to see the negative things in life.
If we are angry with God for the
difficulties we are going through, remember that God has not forsaken us; He
has a good plan and purpose for everything we face. Let us leave aside the
taste of bitterness and start tasting the sweet blessings we have in Christ.
Ruth the Moabite found place in d genealogy of our Messiah...it's because she could stick on to the Mara....her mother-in law...as she said...I will be with you...I will go with u....YOUR GOD will be my GOD...and ur land will be mine....
ReplyDeleteAmen.....GOD knows how to excel if we have d Zeal for the Master
Achaa...aweSome attempt to sow the Word..
LORD....pour out YOUR GRACE on Your Servant Achen Kino and all of us as we read and mulch YOUR Word..
In JESUS' Name.. Amen
Ruth the Moabite found place in d genealogy of our Messiah...it's because she could stick on to the Mara....her mother-in law...as she said...I will be with you...I will go with u....YOUR GOD will be my GOD...and ur land will be mine....
ReplyDeleteAmen.....GOD knows how to excel if we have d Zeal for the Master
Achaa...aweSome attempt to sow the Word..
LORD....pour out YOUR GRACE on Your Servant Achen Kino and all of us as we read and mulch YOUR Word..
In JESUS' Name.. Amen